Melbourne, 1956

Multiple Countries

The 1956 Games were held in Melbourne, Australia. Over 3,000 athletes
participated from 67 countries. These Olympics were the first where
athletic events took place in two countries. This was because the
health services of Australia did not allow the horse-back riding
events to be carried out in their country. The riding event took
place in Stockholm, Sweden.

Fast Facts

Did you know that the Olympics were
also held at third country during 1956? the Olympics were also held
in 1956 in Italy. The winter Olympics that is.

Boycotts

The Games were almost canceled due to an armed conflict both in
Europe as well as Africa. In Europe, the Russians had invaded Hungary,
while the British and French attacked Egypt in order to regain the
Suez Canal. As a sign of protest 6 countries withdrew from the Olympics.
The Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland because of the events in
Hungary and Iraq and Lebanon because of the conflict in Suez. Less
than two weeks before the opening ceremony, the People's Republic
of China also pulled out because the Republic of China (Taiwan)
had been allowed to compete. Although the Games were not canceled,
there were many episodes such as in the water-polo match between
Russia and Hungary.

Changes to the Closing Ceremony

Inspired by the Australian teenager John Wing, an Olympic tradition
began when the athletes of different nations paraded
together at the closing ceremony as a symbol of world unity, a tradition which continues to this day

"During the Games there
will be only one nation. War, politics and nationalities will be
forgotten. What more could anybody want if the world could be made
one nation." - Extract from a letter by John Ian Wing to the
Olympic Organizers, 1956.

Although many references imply that before this date the athletes marched with their national
teams, in a personal message from John Wing, he points out that athletes did not march in the Closing Ceremony at all until his letter in 1956.

This gesture, and the general feeling around the Games, resulted in the Melbourne Games being nicknamed "the Friendly Games". The song that ended the closing ceremony at the 1956 games was 'Will
Ye No Come Back Again?'

Trivia

The Olympic torchbearer for the 1956 Olympics was a virtually unknown
19 year old at the time he carried the torch into the stadium at
Melbourne. Ron Clarke went on to become the world's finest distance
runner in the 1960s.

The 1956 Games were the first games to
be held in the southern hemisphere.

Many know of the grudge polo match between Hungary and the Soviet
Union played at the 1956 Games, soon after the Soviets invaded Hungary, but the result?
Hungary won 4-0, then went on to win gold.

As quarantine laws did not allow the entry of foreign horses into Australia, equestrian events were held in Stockholm in June 1956. The rest of the Games started in late November, when it was summertime in the Southern Hemisphere.

There were a few political crises: Lichtenstein, the Netherlands, Spain, and Sweden boycotted the games in protest of the Soviet invasion of Hungary. Egypt, Lebanon, and Iraq did the same as a result of the Suez crisis. The People's Republic of China refused to participate due to the inclusion of the Republic of China (Taiwan).

The Butterfly event in swimming was "invented" for the 1956 Games after some swimmers had begun to exploit a loophole in the breaststroke rules.